Rumors over the fate of cloud gaming service OnLive swirled on Friday afternoon after reports the company had fired most of its staff. OnLive is being coy about its business situation, but on Friday afternoon several employees were seen leaving the Palo Alto-based company carrying packing boxes.

The tweet was quickly picked up by Mashable and spread across the Web.

OnLive has been largely silent on the issue. Numerous calls and emails have gone unreturned to IDG News Service, however a company spokesman has reached out to some media.

The spokesman, Brian Jaquet, told Mashable, "no comment on the news other than to say, the OnLive service is not shutting down."

Around 2 p.m. some employees were seen leaving the building carrying packing boxes. Others entered and still more could be seen inside, but no one had anything to say.

One person entering the building, when asked if he worked for OnLive, paused apparently unsure of how to answer the question, then said, "Kinda ... sorta." He declined to say anything about what staff had been told.

One woman, a box in her arms, stopped as she left the building to say goodbye to a colleague who was entering.

A large pile of moving boxes sits in the building's basement parking garage.

OnLive operates an on-demand video gaming service that streams games to users via a TV adapter. The company runs the games on its server in the cloud so users don't require complex gaming hardware at home. OnLive's backers include Warner Bros., Autodesk, Maverick Capital, AT&T, British Telecom and The Belgacom Group.